I uncompressed both "VideoThumbnail" and "MagickThumbnail" inside /usr/local/apps, installed Rox-lib and pygtk-2.24.0. When running AppRun files of the directories in a terminal, I get this error message:

... although pygtk-2.24.0 is truly installed on my system. But are pygtk-2.x and pygtk2 two different programs? And if yes, where could I find pygtk2? Or is there any file to configure for pygtk-2 to be taken into account and "recognized" by VideoT and MagickT?

Hello,
Thank you.
Sorry, but looking at the links above, I admit I don't see exactly what could help for solving this problem: simply display additional thumbnails for video and some pictures files using ROX (with Puppy), especially for native files of Gimp, which is one of the major programs of the LINUX world. This has nothing very exceptional and I am amazed this was not already discussed/solved by some Puppy user... I probably didn't search enough?

Cordialement.Last edited by Argolance on Mon 04 Mar 2013, 06:31; edited 1 time in total

# When the window is given the "delete_event" signal (this is given
# by the window manager, usually by the "close" option, or on the
# titlebar), we ask it to call the delete_event () function
# as defined above. The data passed to the callback
# function is NULL and is ignored in the callback function.
self.window.connect("delete_event", self.delete_event)

# Here we connect the "destroy" event to a signal handler.
# This event occurs when we call gtk_widget_destroy() on the window,
# or if we return FALSE in the "delete_event" callback.
self.window.connect("destroy", self.destroy)

# Sets the border width of the window.
self.window.set_border_width(10)

# When the button receives the "clicked" signal, it will call the
# function hello() passing it None as its argument. The hello()
# function is defined above.
self.button.connect("clicked", self.hello, None)

# This will cause the window to be destroyed by calling
# gtk_widget_destroy(window) when "clicked". Again, the destroy
# signal could come from here, or the window manager.
self.button.connect_object("clicked", gtk.Widget.destroy, self.window)

# This packs the button into the window (a GTK container).
self.window.add(self.button)

# The final step is to display this newly created widget.
self.button.show()

# and the window
self.window.show()

def main(self):
# All PyGTK applications must have a gtk.main(). Control ends here
# and waits for an event to occur (like a key press or mouse event).
gtk.main()

# If the program is run directly or passed as an argument to the python
# interpreter then create a HelloWorld instance and show it
if __name__ == "__main__":
hello = HelloWorld()
hello.main()

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